LGBT rights in the Unified Governorates
LGBT rights in the UGB | |
Same-sex sexual activity | Legal / tolerated |
---|---|
Military service | Legal |
Discrimination protections | Sanctuary areas in urban bailiwicks |
"While we do not condone that which runs contrary to the interests of our martial society, charged as it is with the restoration and re-population of an empty land, we must also pragmatically accept that the human spirit, which is innately perverse and driven by an infinitude of fancies to fornicate with any and every form of flesh that will yield to the persuasion or pressure of the will, must be accommodated. A man has as many masters as he has vices, and without outlets to serve as sewers to carry those away he will surely drown in this accumulation of filth not only himself, but his city and the commonwealth. It is therefore on account of this that we do condone, within reason, that which might otherwise be considered unseemly."
Lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transsexual rights do not formally exist in the UGB but such practices as would be protected by those rights do enjoy a significant measure of toleration in the cities and particularly amongst designated urban districts, known colloquially as "Paradises". Same-sex marriage is illegal in consequence of the abolition of the old distinctions of the feudal nobility, wherein such practices had previously been licensed. Outside of these so-called paradises homosexual lifestyles are not especially visible, being subject to various stringent taboos - especially in rural and less developed bailiwicks. Nonetheless the Panopticon Department of the Internal Security Bureau (Benacia Command) assessed that the actual prevalence of same-sex preference individuals, excluding mixed-preference individuals and instances of casual experimentation, are broadly constant with what might be expected in any equivalent human population.
Detailed chart
Same-sex sexual activity legal | ![]() |
Gender expression | ![]() |
Age of consent | It remains a criminal offence to engage in sexual relations with any person under the age of 15 years. The penalty for violations of which include a five year term of service with the Benacian Labour Reserve or referral to the Cull Commission in the event of an egregious violation of social norms. |
Anti-discrimination laws in employment | ![]() |
Anti-discrimination laws in the provision of goods and services | ![]() |
Conversion therapy | ![]() |
Anti-discrimination laws in all other areas (incl. indirect discrimination, hate speech) | ![]() |
Same-sex marriage | ![]() |
Recognition of same-sex unions | ![]() |
"Rainbow-flag" activities | ![]() |
Joint and step-child adoption by same-sex couples | ![]() However, in practice wellborn members of the N&H National Sector Party, the Honourable Company, and the BUDF, are permitted to foster juveniles who have been purchased into the service of their respective organisations. |
Gay people allowed to serve in the military | ![]() |
Right to change legal gender | ![]() |
Access to IVF for lesbians | A service discretely available to the wellborn. |
MSMs allowed to donate blood | ![]() |
Third gender | ![]() |
Surrogacy | ![]() |